Break

In episode two of Prison Break, one of the lessons contained is getting along. It is being mentioned clearly and loudly by the character Warden Henry Pope to every inmate, and by Charles West Moreland directly to Michael J. Scofield. Actually getting along is in the middle of a continuum. The lowest point is staying out of trouble, and the highest point is living a life within order and harmony. However staying out of trouble, or just getting along in our life is not enough. Each individual shall contribute to order and harmony in our relationships with every other individual, within the societal structure from the base of dyad, upward to team, group, association, organization, state, nation, world, and the apex is the universe. So the pertinent question at this moment is, do we ever wish ...[Read More]

In episode two of Prison Break, one of the lessons contained is getting along. It is being mentioned clearly and loudly by the character Warden Henry Pope to every inmate, and by Charles West Moreland directly to Michael J. Scofield. Actually getting along is in the middle of a continuum. The lowest point is staying out of trouble, and the highest point is living a life within order and harmony. However staying out of trouble, or just getting along in our life is not enough. Each individual will contribute to order and harmony in our relationships with every other individual, within the societal structure from the base of dyad, up to team, group, association, organization, state, nation, world, and the apex is the universe. So the pertinent question at this moment is, do we ever wish that ...[Read More]